Delta Mariner will be christened and launched in a ceremony at the Halter Marine Shipyard in Pascagoula, Mississippi. Photo: Boeing

Today a 312-foot rocket ship will be launched from the banks of the Pascagoula River in Mississippi.

The Motor Vessel (M/V) Delta Mariner, built by Halter Maritime in its
shipyard in Pascagoula for Foss Marine of Seattle Wash., will ferry Boeing Delta 4
rockets from Decatur, Ala., to launch sites in Florida and California.

"Over the past 12 months, we've watched many significant milestones in our
Delta 4 program," said Mike Kennedy, Evolved Expendable Launch
Vehicle/Delta 4 vice president. "This is the perfect milestone with which
to end the year, because the Delta Mariner ties all of those events
together.

"From the production facility we brought online in Decatur, to the launch
pads we're building at Cape Canaveral (Air Station, Fla.), and Vandenberg
(Air Force Base, Calif.), and the accomplishments of our Alliant Techsystems
and the Boeing Rocketdyne partners, we are continuing to progress toward a
first launch in 2001."

Alliant Techsystems in Iuka, Miss., is building large composite structures
used to assemble the Delta 4 family of launch vehicles in Decatur. While in
November, another division of Alliant Techsystems completed the first test
firing of the solid rocket motors that will be used on the Delta 4 M+
variants.

At the same time, the Boeing Rocketdyne Division activated and put into use
two test stands at the John C. Stennis Space Center in Stennis, Miss., for
the testing of the Delta 4 main engine, the RS-68. Boeing is also
assembling the main engines for the Delta 4 launch vehicles in a new
facility at Stennis.

The centerpiece of the Boeing Delta 4 program is the 1.5-million
square-foot production facility in Decatur, Ala. The facility was officially
brought on line earlier this year with the assembly of the first Delta 4
common booster core.

Common booster cores are the building blocks of the Delta 4 family of
launch vehicles, and house the rocket's main engine, fuel tanks, and
first-stage avionics. All five of the Delta 4 variants use at least one
CBC; the Delta 4 Heavy uses three.

Delta Mariner in Pascagoula where it was built. Photo: Boeing

Designed to work on inland waterways and the open ocean, the Delta Mariner
will transport space-bound hardware from Decatur, down the Tennessee
Tombigbee waterway through Mobile Bay and into the Gulf of Mexico, before
rounding the Florida peninsula toward the Cape or transiting the Panama
Canal en route to California.

Delta 4 common booster cores, the size of commercial airplane fuselages,
will be carried on and off the ship by specialized mobile transporters via
the ramp in the stern of the vessel. The rocket's second-stages will be
carried in specialized climate-controlled containers onboard the vessel. The
vessel also will transport the payload adapters, which attach the spacecraft
to the rocket, and the protective shells that surround the spacecraft, known
as fairings.

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